If yes, Hyperlapse videos are necessary for you to create smooth, stabilized time lapses of long first-person videos often characterized by wilding shaking motion or jerky movements.

Condensing long videos into short, smooth time lapses from first-person videos

Capturing first-person videos of organizational experiences, processes, and explorations carries significant business value. However, many such videos can be extremely lengthy, sometimes drawn out for several hours, deeming them time-prohibitive and even dull to watch – no matter how important, high quality or exhilarating the content. Moreover, since first person videos tend to have a great degree of motion and bumpiness, it is challenging to create smooth time-lapse videos summaries.

Hyperlapse technology resolves all such pains by stabilizing the jerkiness of first-person videos and distilling the best and most compatible parts of the video into a short version that is easy to watch and share across teams. The result is a smooth, consistent and high-speed video rendered in a fraction of the time without the motion impact associated with high-speed videos.

Enterprise applications for Hyperlapse Videos

GoPro videos and other body-worn cameras

Body worn-cameras like GoPro serve very a very practical purpose for enterprises. Businesses can utilize the highly immersive and engaging personal value of GoPro videos to give customers close and intimate insight into their product, its feature, functionalities, and capabilities in practice, from a first-person perspective. Moreover, service companies can use GoPro to offer insight into the ‘experience’ they provide for their customer. Similarly, GoPro videos make for excellent content to showcase workplace culture from a highly personable perspective for recruitment. However, no matter how creative and engaging this content may be, people don’t watch videos longer than a few minutes, so Hyperlapse plays an integral role in making GoPro videos marketable. Also, since GoPro videos are often shaky and bumpy, depending on the action, Hyperlapse is the only way to shorten them into smooth and stabilized videos fit for watching.

Drone videos

Drones are widely used across industries to gather video from remote site inspections in transportation, infrastructure, and construction; aerial surveying and monitoring in agriculture, mining, oil and gas, etc.; product deliveries for e-commerce and emergency medical response, among others specialized use cases like assisted installations, precise spraying, and even repairs. However, drones collect large volumes of long videos at a stretch, which can be easily shortened into smooth Hyperlapse videos for wider viewing, concisely highlighting the most important aspects of otherwise lengthy footage. Hyperlapse, therefore, serves a vital role in making drone footage practically consumable and usable for a variety of business use cases that would be difficult or impractical to accomplish from hours of drawn out drone footage.

Onshore/ offshore exploration videos

A wide range of industries use video for gathering mission critical footage from underground mining or deep water or offshore drilling sites for oil and gas – all of which generates extensive video footage that can span for hours at length. Hyperlapse offers a unique value to summarize these videos while capturing any significant portions that show any disruptions, changes or anomalies that are important for closely surveying or monitoring the sites. The resulting videos are distilled summaries of otherwise lengthy footage collected over hours or even days of exploration.

Filmmaking and extreme sports

Filmmakers are increasingly experimenting with creative ways to personalize media for maximum audience engagement. As a result, Hyperlapse for first-person videos has increasingly gained traction in film. Additionally, Hyperlapse holds immense potential for extreme sports media, which requires short and smooth time-lapse movies that accommodate the jerks, bumpiness and extreme shakiness associated with extreme sports to turn the lengthy footage into a short, speedy, and stabilized video that succinctly captures the entire action.